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<dc:title>Lute, Vihuela, and Early Guitar</dc:title>
<dc:creator>Kieffer, Paul</dc:creator>
<dc:creator>Griffiths, John</dc:creator>
<dc:description>Producción Científica</dc:description>
<dc:description>Lutes, guitars, and vihuelas were the principal plucked instruments in use in Europe until around&#xd;
1800. Ancient forms of the lute existed in many parts of the ancient world, from Egypt and&#xd;
Persia through to China. It appears to have become known in Europe, where its earliest&#xd;
associations were with immigrants such as the legendary Persian lutenist Ziryab (b. c. 790–d.&#xd;
852), who was established in Moorish Spain by 822. The origins of the various flat-backed&#xd;
instruments that eventually became guitars are more difficult to trace. The vihuela is one such&#xd;
instrument that evolved in the mid-15th century and was prolific in Spain and its dominions&#xd;
throughout the 16th century and beyond. Very few plucked instruments, and only a handful of&#xd;
fragmentary musical compositions, survive from before 1500. The absence of artifacts and&#xd;
musical sources prior to 1500 has been a point of demarcation in the study of early plucked&#xd;
instruments, although current research is seeking to explore the continuity of instrumental&#xd;
practice across this somewhat artificial divide. In contrast, perhaps as many as thirty thousand&#xd;
works—perhaps even more—for lute, guitar, and vihuela survive from the period 1500–1800.&#xd;
The music and musical practices associated with them are not well integrated into general&#xd;
histories of music. This is due in part to the use of tablature as the principal notation format until&#xd;
about 1800, and also because writers of general histories of music have for the most part&#xd;
ignored solo instrumental music in their coverage. (For example, the Oxford Anthology of&#xd;
Western Music, Vol. 1 (2018), designed to accompany chapters 1–11 of Richard Taruskin’s&#xd;
Oxford History of Western Music, does not contain a single piece of instrumental music prior to&#xd;
Frescobaldi [1637]). Contrary to this marginalized image, lutes, vihuelas, and guitars were a&#xd;
revered part of courtly musical culture until well into the 18th century, and constantly present in&#xd;
urban contexts. After the development of basso continuo practice after 1600, plucked&#xd;
instruments also became frequent in Christian church music, although the lute was widely&#xd;
played by clerics of all levels, particularly during the Renaissance. It was also one of the&#xd;
principal tools used by composers of liturgical polyphony, in part because tablature was the&#xd;
most common way of writing music in score. From the beginning of music printing, printed&#xd;
tablatures played a fundamental role in the urban dissemination of music originally for church&#xd;
and court, and plucked instruments were used widely by all levels of society for both leisure and&#xd;
pleasure. After 1800, the lute fell from use, the guitar was transformed into its modern form with&#xd;
single strings, and tablature ceased to be the preferred notation for plucked instruments.</dc:description>
<dc:date>2020-01-24T20:41:51Z</dc:date>
<dc:date>2020-01-24T20:41:51Z</dc:date>
<dc:date>2018</dc:date>
<dc:type>info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart</dc:type>
<dc:identifier>Kate van Orden (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Music, New York, 2018</dc:identifier>
<dc:identifier>9780199757824</dc:identifier>
<dc:identifier>http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/40351</dc:identifier>
<dc:identifier>Oxford Bibliographies in Music</dc:identifier>
<dc:language>eng</dc:language>
<dc:rights>info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess</dc:rights>
<dc:publisher>Oxford University Press</dc:publisher>
</ow:Publication>
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